The Commercial Appeal

Memphis board spares three charter schools from closure

- Laura Faith Kebede

All seven charter schools up for renewal this year won agreements to operate another 10 years despite a recommenda­tion from Shelby County Schools staff to close three of them.

A unanimous vote from the Memphis school board spared Memphis Business Academy Middle, Memphis College Preparator­y Elementary and Veritas College Preparator­y from closing. A separate vote affirmed the district’s recommenda­tion to keep open Southern Avenue Elementary, Promise Academy Hollywood, Soulsville Charter School and Memphis School of Excellence.

The votes mean about 2,800 students will not have to find another school to attend in the fall. The decisions are the first 10-year renewals under the school board’s new charter school policy, which was created by a group of charter and district leaders after years of negotiatio­ns.

The board’s policy was meant to hold charter schools accountabl­e for academic performanc­e. But even though district staff used the policy to recommend closing the three schools, board members looked at other factors in their final decision.

“None of us are doing the work we really want to do, but we understand this urban work it’s holistic,” Anthony Anderson, CEO of the Memphis Business

Academy charter school network, said after the vote. “It’s about academics, but it’s also about building confidence.”

Charter operators disputed some of the district’s findings, which mostly used state test scores over the last 10 years to recommend which charter schools to keep open.

Some charter leaders said during their hearings earlier this month that the board should consider that they have helped parents find jobs, invested millions in commercial developmen­t including a medical clinic, and are even working to build houses to support school families.

About a dozen parents, staff and students from the schools recommende­d for closure spoke to the school board.

“They care about us and our education our well-being. I need them,” said Amya Faulkner, an eighth-grader at Veritas College Preparator­y.

“If they close down our school, where are we going to go?” her twin, Diamond Faulkner, said. Stephanie Love, a school board member whose district includes Memphis Business Academy Middle, said network leaders “understand now what their challenges are and what they need to do,” and cited state law that allows the board to close them if their test scores drop, even before the schools are eligible for renewal again in 10 years.

“They got a victory with us today, but if they don’t meet that, they’ll be closed,” Love said after the meeting. “This is a lesson to all schools that we have challenges, so it shouldn’t be about us versus them because on any given day, a child could leave an SCS school and enter a charter school,” and vice versa.

Tyree Daniels, a board member for Memphis College Prep, said he was “jubilant” at the board’s vote. The school opened 10 years ago in Uptown but moved to the Alcy Ball neighborho­od three years ago. He said the school is still recovering academical­ly from that transition, but has seen progress.

“The board is giving us more time to do the work we have set out to do,” he said.

Originally posted on Chalkbeat, a nonprofit news site covering educationa­l change in public schools, by Laura Faith Kebede on January 28, 2020

 ?? LAURA FAITH KEBEDE ?? Supporters celebrate a unanimous vote from the Shelby County Schools board to keep open three charter schools.
LAURA FAITH KEBEDE Supporters celebrate a unanimous vote from the Shelby County Schools board to keep open three charter schools.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States